i'd like to see all the features that available in rjh extensions.i really love rjh extensions, but it doesnt work in xp, it wont release its' dll or handles or something, that cause folders in use all the time and undeleteable.

If you find a good solution and become attached to it, the solution may become your next problem.~Robert Anthony

I use Context Edit and it does everything I've ever wanted to do to my context menu. Remove unwanted entries, add new filetypes and special functions for certain filetypes, etc. I can't remember where I got it, apparently pcmag wants money for it.

I use Context Edit and it does everything I've ever wanted to do to my context menu. Remove unwanted entries, add new filetypes and special functions for certain filetypes, etc. I can't remember where I got it, apparently pcmag wants money for it.

we've actually been working on cmc a lot off an on.and i am ABOUT to release a beta of Launch Bar Commander any day now.(Launch Bar Commander is the precursor to context menu commander sharing the same core code, and will be one of at least 2 and possibly 3 or 4 apps that we release build on the same engine).

FileTargets is a shell context menu extension that adds a sub-menu with all your favorite folder names to the context-menu of all files and folders in your system so you can copy/move selected files to pre-defined, most used folders with the click of a mouse. FileTargets menu is similar to the standard SendTo menu but is much more advanced since it allows you to create subgroups, automatically add new folders, copy file path names and much more.

I formerly used the sendto toys, but I found that it takes a lot more time to load that menu than file targets, and that file targets is generally easier to work with.

Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both. - Benjamin Franklin

I'm a big fan of the perhaps-abandonware "rcFTP" program -- it's a tiny one-way ftp program designed to integrate into the right click menu. First thing you do with it is plug in your ftp server login info and add folders you'll want to send files to on those servers. Once that's setup, uploading a file is as simple as right click -> send to -> rcFTP -- then you select the server and folder you want from the dropdowns and send it. Simple on the fly ftp.

- A folders submenu with all my favorite folders that would allow me to navigate to them with a simple right click (and it should be able to reuse any open explorer window if I want it to)- A "Create folder" button (as the windows "New>" submenu is sooo slow!!!).

A tool that adds those two (and perhaps "command promt here" although there is already a Microsoft PowerToy that does that) woul be perfect!

Amadawn

P.S.- When is the first release of this program expected?The thing that I'd like the most wou

the 2 things you requested will be in context menu commander for sure.

release date is a bit hard to estimate - i've been working very hard on the shared infrastructure that will be used in a series of programs inlcuding contextmenu commander, and the first app to use this will be launch bar commander and it looks like farr 2. contextmenu commander is a joint project with another programmer so it's a bit harder to give a real date. However, a good deal of the code is already written and working, so it's not vaporware, just a matter of scheduling

I too am very much looking forward to an all-in-one solution like this, but I have to think at some point something like this could easily start to get bloated down with features (which could be an issue for a program that runs all the time in the background), so my question is, how much of a priority is keeping memory consumption to a low going to be?

i really look forward to writing about context menu commander when it comes out..basically ive been spending a lot of time making a really nice friendly and very powerful infrastructure for letting users design custom hierarhical menus and stuff, which would be useful for designing custom context menus, launch bars, and more. i'm really very proud of it and i plan to be using it in several programs.

but the good news is that the code is specifically designed so that a very lightweight windows dll will be used to handle the context menu stuff. in fact because of the way the cmc is being designed it will be incredibly light on resource usage

lets you analyze your Applications and DLLs dependencies. Now includes 16 Bit (NE) support !

Right click on a DLL or EXE File, select Properties, a new page titled 'dependencies' is displayed. You can see all directly or indirectly needed DLLs displayed either in a tree view or in a list view.

See dependencies of your modules as tree view or flat as list, easily find all Files that make your application run, quick jump to the listed entries or copy information to the clipboard.

IE Booster offers tools to extend Internet Explorer, but the version which was free is no longer available on the website. It helps you to dig into the technology behind a website, to analyze the HTML and script code, to copy content and to use online tools to analyze a webpage.

As a webmaster, I use it to analyze errors in code snippets. You can right click, show partial source and see exactly what you've highlighted.

IE Booster offers tools to extend Internet Explorer, but the version which was free is no longer available on the website. It helps you to dig into the technology behind a website, to analyze the HTML and script code, to copy content and to use online tools to analyze a webpage.

As a webmaster, I use it to analyze errors in code snippets. You can right click, show partial source and see exactly what you've highlighted.

I suspect the move to freeware will mean suspension of development (they were already running down updates for Firefox when it was still commercial) but it does the job.

Note you really have to prune the number of context menu items visible in Internet Explorer otherwise it almost fill sthe maximum number of slots in that menu (it is a known problem with IE, but PSI doesn't help the situation by adding loads of entries). Check the preferences to decide which options you want included.

Firefox has taught me tab-browsing. And with IE7 being for XP and Vista only, I and my Win2K would shure like IE6 to able to "Open in new window blur" (or what the English term might be, saying 'out of focus') from the right-click menu, instead of always stealing focus.